Fokker C.V

C.V, C.VI, and C.IX
Finnish Fokker C.V-E's
Role Light recce, bomber aircraft
Manufacturer Fokker
Introduction 1924
Primary users Royal Netherlands Air Force
Italian Air Force
Norwegian Army Air Service
Swedish Air Force
Hungarian Air Force
Danish Air Force
Finnish Air Force
Number built C.VI: 33
C.V-B: 18
C.V-C: 16
C.V-D: 212
C.V-E: 327
Ro.1 and Ro.1-bis: 349; Altogether: 955


Fokker C.V was a Dutch light reconnaissance and bomber biplane aircraft manufactured by Fokker. It was designed by Anthony Fokker and the series manufacture began in 1924 at Fokker in Amsterdam.

Development

The C.V was constructed in the early 1920s by Anthony Fokker. The aircraft was intended as a two-seat reconnaissance and bomber aircraft. When shown to the public in 1924 was manufactured in a variety of versions; the customer could choose from five different wing constructions (which varied in wing span). The radial engines could give between 336–723 kW (451–970 hp). The landing gear could be changed from wheels to pontoons. The aircraft became an export success for Fokker, it was sold and/or license manufactured in Bolivia, China, Denmark, Finland, Hungary, Italy, Japan, the Netherlands, Norway, Switzerland, the Soviet Union and the US.[1] Sweden purchased two different versions to use as models for their license manufacturing of the reconnaissance version S 6 and a fighter version J 3.

Operational history

Finland

The Finnish Air Force used both C.V-Ds and C.V-Es. One C.V-E was purchased in 1927, with delivery 20 September, and a further 13 were purchased on 17 March 1934, arriving in the winter of 1935. During the Winter War, Sweden donated three more C.V-Es. Two C.V-Ds were also flown from Norway to Finland at the closing stages of the Norwegian Campaign. These were interned and turned over to the FAF. The aircraft were used as reconnaissance and light bomber aircraft between 20 September 1927 and 14 February 1945. During the Winter War, the Finnish C.Vs flew 151 reconnaissance and harassment bombing sorties without suffering any losses. The Continuation War saw the C.Vs flying an unknown number of sorties and suffering one aircraft loss.[2]

TypeNumberNotes
C.V-E1Bristol Jupiter engine; FO-39
C.V-E13Pegasus engine; FO-65 to -77
C.V-E3Mercury engine, gift from Sweden; FO-19, -23 & -80
C.V-D2Panther engine, interned Norwegian aircraft; FO-65 & -66

Italy

Romeo Ro.1

The C.VE was built in Italy by OFM (Officine Ferroviarie Meridionali, later IMAM) under licence in 1927 as the Romeo Ro.1. It was used by the Aviation Corps of the Regio Esercito (Italian Army) as an observation and ground attack aircraft. Well liked in the civilian market, it was selected for use by Air Marshal Italo Balbo, as superior to the Breda A.7 and Ansaldo A.120. It entered service in 1927, in Italian Libya against the local rebels. It was used both for reconnaissance and light attack. It was convertible as a three-seat machine, or as a light attack aircraft (two machine-guns), or as a very long range aircraft with an auxiliary fuel tank that increased the endurance from five to twelve hours. The last version had a 410 kW (550 hp) engine instead of 321 kW (430 hp) and produced until 1934, a total of 456, but it was outdated and too slow for the standards of the mid-1930s. Although this was only an army observation aircraft, it still had a quite powerful engine and performance. In 1933, there were 40 squadrons, of seven machines each, related to the Italian Army, with 238 Ro.1s as the main aircraft force. It was the most numerous Italian aircraft in the Second Italo-Abyssinian War.

Norway

Model of a Norwegian Army Air Service Fokker C.V in winter camouflage

The Norwegian Army Air Service bought its first five C.VEs in 1926. The initial purchase agreement with Fokker included license production rights, and in the period 1929-1931, 15 C.VEs were manufactured at the NoAAS' aircraft factory at Kjeller. After the production of C.VEs ended, a further 28 C.VDs followed between 1932 and 1939. In total, the NoAAS operated 48 Fokker C.Vs, 43 of which were license built in Norway. When the Germans invaded Norway on 9 April 1940, 42 Fokker C.Vs were still in Norwegian service. The C.Vs were based on several air bases in different parts of the country and mostly saw service as reconnaissance aircraft and light bomber. Although the planes were outdated, they still saw extensive and successful service in the bomber role during the April–June 1940 Norwegian Campaign, supporting Norwegian ground troops fighting on the Narvik front.[3][4]

Netherlands

The type was used by the Luchtvaartafdeeling (pre war airforce), MLD (marine luchtvaartdienst) and KNIL-ML. For the Luchtvaartafdeling 67 examples were produced in several batches between 1926 and 1934. 28 were still operational at the time of the German attack on the Netherlands on 10 May 1940. They were used successfully on reconnaissance and bombing missions using "nap of the earth" (HuBoBe)(short for huisje-boompje-beestje, literally translated into house-tree-animal, referring to the low altitude at which they flew) flying techniques. Nearly two dozen aircraft were used as trainers and hacks, or in storage and repair

Sweden

In 1927, the Swedish Air Force purchased two C.VDs (J 3) and two C.VE (S 6) to serve as models for the eventual license manufacturing of the aircraft by CVM at Malmen. The four aircraft were flown to Sweden in 1928. They proved suitable and an agreement for licence production was made and a further four C.V-E and six C.V-D were purchased,[5] the latter designated J 3A. Seven C.VD ordered from CVM were built as C.VE, as by 1929 it was clear the type was unsuitable as a fighter, but still they were designated J 3B.[6]

In 1931, the J 3B were redesignated S 6, the J 3 and J 3A S 6A.[6] Ten C.VE with Nohab My VI engines instead of Jupiter VI engines were given the designation S 6B.[5]

The S 6 became the prime liaison aircraft for the Swedish Air Force. It was used for fire spotting, aerial photographing and liaison duty in conjunction with the Army. At the outbreak of World War II, there were 36 aircraft left in service. They would continue until being replaced by Saab 17s from 1942.[7] CVM manufactured 17 S 6 between 1929 and 1932. Some were fitted with floats and designated S 6H.

In 1945, the SwAF sold three S 6s to Svensk Flygtjänst to be used for aerial application over forest. Two other were sold to Skåneflyg in 1947. One is preserved and can be seen in the Swedish Air Force Museum. Lieutenant Einar Lundborg rescued the Italian General Umberto Nobile in 1928, with a S 6B,[5] equipped with skis. Nobile was on an ice shelf after his airship Italia had crashed on its way to the North Pole.[5]

NameNumberNotes
Sweden Netherlands
S 6Fokker C.V-E306 Fokker C.V-E and 24 CVM Fokker C.V-Es, Jupiter VI engine 336 kW (450 hp)
S 6AFokker C.V-E87 Fokker C.V-E and 1 CVM Fokker C.V-E, Jupiter VI engine 336 kW (450 hp)
S 6BCVM C.V-E101934-45, NOHAB My VI engine 447 kW (600 hp)
S 6HC.V-E?CVM Fokker C.V-E (Hydro) with pontoons
J 3Fokker C.V-D21927-30, designation change to S 6A in 1931
J 3AFokker C.V-D61929-30, designation change to S 6A in 1931
J 3BCVM C.V-D61930-45, designation change to S 6 in 1931

Switzerland

Cutaway model of a Swiss Army Air Corps Fokker C.V-E.

After comparative trials in 1927, Swiss authorities had 48 C.V.-E licence-built in Switzerland for use by the Swiss Air Force (then the Swiss Army Air Corps). 24 machines were built at K+W Thun and 24 at Doflug Altenrhein. The aircraft were in service from 1933 to 1940 and were armed with bombs, two pilot machine guns and a double machine gun for the observer. The Swiss Air Force used their C.Vs as target tugs until 1954, after their retirement from frontline service.[8]

Germany

During their occupation of Denmark, the Germans seized some Danish Fokker C.V.-Es. Some of these aircraft were used by the Estonian volunteer-manned Nachtschlachtgruppe 11 (Night Ground Attack Wing 11) at Rahkla in 1944.[9] NSGr. 11 used its C.V-Es on the Eastern Front to carry out disruptive harassment night bombing sorties against the Russian front lines. These operations were carried out in response to similar nocturnal operations by Soviet light aircraft, such as Po-2 biplanes.[10] Two of the C.V-Es of the NSGr. 11 were flown to Sweden in October 1944 by four Estonian defectors, and one of them was returned to the Danes by the Swedes in 1947.[11]

Variants

C.V-A
(or C.Va) reconnaissance aircraft
C.V-B
(or C.Vb) reconnaissance aircraft, 18 built.
C.V-C
(or C.Vc) ground attack aircraft. Users: the Netherlands 6, Bolivia 5
C.V-D
(or C.Vd) reconnaissance, bomber and escort fighter. Users: Finland 2, Denmark 49, Hungary 68 (Ds and Es), the Netherlands 119 (VIs, Ds and Cs), Norway 27, Sweden 2, Switzerland 3, Germany 15 (Ds and Es).
C.V-E
(or C.Ve) light bomber. Users: Finland 17, Denmark 31, Hungary 68 (Ds and Es), the Netherlands 18, KNIL 20, Germany 15 (Ds and Es), Norway 46, Sweden 51, Switzerland 61.
C.V-W
C.V-C floatplane. One built.
C.VI
reconnaissance aircraft with Hispano-Suiza engine, 33 converted from C.V-D
C.IX
reconnaissance variant of C.V-E with Hispano-Suiza 12N engine; five built for Netherlands, one exported to Switzerland
IMAM Ro.1 and Ro.1-bis
Italian licence built light bomber; 349 manufactured
Manfred Weiss WM-9 Budapest
licence-built Fokker C.V-E[12]
Manfred Weiss WM-11 Budapest
Hungarian licence-built Fokker C.V-D[12]
Manfred Weiss WM-14 Budapest
Hungarian licence-built Fokker C.V-D[12]
Manfred Weiss WM-16 Budapest[12]
WM-16A with 410 kW (550 hp) Gnome-Rhône 9K Mistral, 9 built
WM-16B with 641.3 kW (860 hp) Gnome-Rhône 14K Mistral Major, 9 built
Manfred Weiss WM-21 Sólyom
development of WM-16[12]

Operators

 Bolivia
 Republic of China
 Denmark
 Finland
 Germany
 Italy
 Hungary
 Netherlands
 Norway
 Soviet Union
 Sweden
  Switzerland
 United States

Specifications (C.V)

Data from War over Holland (English)National Norwegian Aviation Museum (English) Thulinista Hornetiin

General characteristics

C.V-D: 9.4 m (31 ft)
C.V-E: 9.53 m (31 ft)
C.V-E: 15.3 m (50 ft)
C.V-D: 2,000 kg (4,409 lb)
C.V-E: 2,400 kg (5,291 lb)
C.V-D: 1 x Bristol Jupiter 336 kW (451 hp) 9-cyl. air-cooled radial piston engine
C.V-E: 1 x Napier Lion 298 kW (400 hp) W-12-cyl. water-cooled piston engine
or 1 x Armstrong Siddeley Panther II 429 kW (575 hp) 14-cyl. air-cooled radial piston engine
or 1 x Bristol Jupiter VI 313 kW (420 hp) 9-cyl. air-cooled radial piston engine

Performance

C.V-D: 215 km/h (134 mph)
C.V-E: 215 km/h (134 mph)
C.V-D: 5,900 m (19,357 ft)

Armament

C.V-D: 2 × 7.2 mm (.28 in) machine guns
C.V-E: 1 × 7.9 mm (.31 in) machine gun
C.V-D: 16 × 8 kg (17½ lb) bombs or 4 × 50 kg (110 lb) bombs
C.V-E: 16 × 8 kg (17½ lb) bombs or 4 × 50 kg (110 lb)bombs

See also


Related lists

Footnotes

  1. War over Holland: Fokker C.V (English)
  2. Backwoods Landing Strip: Finnish Air Force aircraft (English)
  3. National Norwegian Aviation Museum website: The Exhibitions (English)
  4. Kraglund, Ivar (1995). "Fokker C.V.E.". In Dahl; Hjeltnes; Nøkleby; Ringdal; Sørensen. Norsk krigsleksikon 1940-45 (in Norwegian). Oslo: Cappelen. p. 111. ISBN 82-02-14138-9.
  5. 1 2 3 4 S 6 - Fokker C.V (1927-1946)
  6. 1 2 J 3 - Fokker C.VD (1928-1931)
  7. S 17BL & S 17BS - SAAB S 17 (1942-1952)
  8. Information plaque at the Fliegermuseum Dübendorf.
  9. Weal 2003, p. 105
  10. Weal 2003, p. 64
  11. Weal 2003, p. 125
  12. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Fokker in the Royal Hungarian Air Force (English)
  13. Swanborough, Gordon; Bowers, Peter M. (1976). United States Navy Aircraft since 1911 (Second ed.). London: Putnam. ISBN 0-370-10054-9.

References

External links

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